Most of us have heard the phrase looking at the world through rose colored glasses. Most of the time, it simply means that we have chosen to view something in a positive light. And in fact, I think we very often do choose to view the world in which we live with certain preconceived ideas. I believe all of us look at life through the lens of a particular worldview. I believe further, that it is impossible not to interpret the events that unfold around us without passing them through some sort of intellectual filter. It helps us understand things, and allows us to categorize other peoples' opinions and biases.
If we are talking here about viewing things through a particular type of lens, then to begin with, I can list off several non-Biblical systems of thought. For example, the atheist says that there is no God at all, so don't bother looking. The relativist says that all truth is relative, and depends only on what you personally decide is right or wrong as an individual. A universalist might stop you in the hall and remind you that basically everything shakes out to similar attributes in the end. Finally, Scientism tells us that we can only ever know the physical world around us, and nothing else really matters.
If you notice, all of these worldviews seem to share one thing in
common: they don't leave space for any higher, greater truth claims. They
look only so far as their particular belief system allows, and no
further. Any appeal to a higher moral or ethical power is limited by
whatever a worldview happens to espouse. In other words, there is a glass
ceiling in terms of how much truth you can access, in relation to the
aforementioned beliefs.
I will contrast this to the orthodox Christian Biblical view in a
moment, but first I want to point to a piece of Scripture from Acts 9:18.
It says, "Immediately, something like scales fell from Saul's eyes, and
he could see again. He got up and was baptized, and after taking some
food, he regained his strength." This passage describes the
apostle Paul's famous conversion on the road to Damascus. In a flash of
light and loud audible voice, Saul becomes Paul, and he meets the real God for
the first time. His spiritual eyes were opened.
Author and philosopher C.S. Lewis has been quoted as saying, "I
believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen; not only because I
see it, but because by it I see everything else." God is our
primary source of goodness in this world. If we aren't looking at things
by His light, then we are missing something. All we see are
shadows. We need His help to see things clearly, to understand the
parables and stories of the Bible, and to help spread the Gospel message.
Without it, we can easily slip back into one of the secular categories I
mentioned earlier.
By the way, once the scales come off, we are free. There is no
going back. We are free to love without reservation, to shed guilt
associated with sin, and to recognize the need for repentance in order to come
closer to a Holy life. This all takes some work of course, but it is work
with an end goal of hope (getting closer to a loving God). Whereas other
worldviews are often limited by a finite end goal, the Christian view allows
its proponents to test other opinions and views by stacking them up against
what God says in the Bible. At that point, we can weigh an idea based on
whether or not it yields good fruit and produces spiritual growth, or whether
it espouses false prophecy and conflict.
As a final note, I wanted to add that some readers may accuse me of being a victim of my own religious bias and Christian worldview, in the same way that I have faulted secular belief systems. But understand this difference ... in a solid Christian church, a new believer has the freedom to question faith and look around a bit. Can adherents of the other views I mentioned do that? For example, if the atheist starts talking about the possibility of the supernatural, I suspect intense criticism would follow. Likewise, if a naturalist tries to question macro-evolution or the Darwinian view on human origins, they are "out of the club" so to speak. By contrast, a confident and loving Christian church can provide a safe platform by which a new convert can 'kick the tires' and test ideas. This is how iron sharpens iron. So the sooner we shed those scales, the sooner God can open our spiritual eyes.
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